This is a slip and fall case and is an appeal by an invitee from an instructed verdict in favor of the defendant building owner, and concerns the nature of the duty the owner owed the invitee.
T. J. Camp was an employee for a dental clinic that officed on the second floor of the Kirkpatrick Building, situated in downtown San Antonio and owned by Kirkpatrick Compаny. On the morning of April 1, 1949, there had been a slow moderate rain for several hours. Camp on that morning attended to some personal business matters until about eleven o’clock and then went to the building. He got out of a car that stopped at the curb and with the use of crutches walked across the wet sidewalk to an entranceway leading to a stаirway to the second floor. The entranceway was owned and controlled by the Kirkpatrick Company. It was about five feet wide and extended about eight feet from the edge of the sidewalk to the first riser of the stairway. The floor was constructed of terrazzo, sloped about three inches from the foot of the stair toward the sidewalk and there was a roof that covered the entranceway. When Camp entered upon the entranceway it was still raining. Camp-had worked in the same building and had used the stairs and the approach for more than thirteen years, during which time he had seen all the physical characteristics of the floor, the slope and the entranceway, thousands of timеs. The proof showed that the building management employed a janitor and that during bad weather he placed a “coco” mat in the entranceway. On the morning of April 1, 1941, the management owned a mat that was five feet long and four feet wide, but on that morning it was not placed in the entranceway. The management knew that it was raining, as-did also the aрpellant. There was no proof of any previous incident of slipping on the approach, or that the owner had actual knowledge that it was slippery. Camp fell in the entranceway and sustained injuries for which he sought recovery.
Appellant asserted negligence on the part of the Kirkpatrick Company for: (1) permitting mud and water to accumulate on the approach, (2) failing to place-the coco mat on the approach, and (3) maintaining the approach with the three inch slope. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence, the court granted defendant’s-motion for instructed verdict, which asserted, (1) failure to prove defendant’s negligence, (2) that thе evidence as a matter of law established plaintiff’s contributory negligence, (3) as well as the defense of volenti non fit injuria, and (4) that the conditions complained of were open and obvious.
Slip and fall cases, like other negligence suits, involve at least the existence of a legal duty toward the invitee and the owner’s negligent breach of that duty proximately resulting in injury to the invitee. The burden of proving any claimed contributory negligence or other defense rests upon the owner. Some authorities hold that there is no original breach of duty by an owner when the condition com
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plained of is open and obvious. Houston Nat. Bank v. Adair,
To discern the burden that rests upon a plaintiff invitee, it is necessary to state correctly the duty the owner owes him, and the confusion of plaintiff’s and defendant’s burden is traceable to an overstatement of the duty owing the invitee. The oft-cited duty rule in Marshall v. San Jacinto Building Co., Inc., Tex.Civ.App.,
A more correct statement of an owner’s duty would be that he is under a duty to use reasonable care to make and keep the premises free from danger to invitees when the danger is known or should be known by the proprietor. Smith v. Henger,
An invitee is also under a duty to exercise reasonable care for his own self-protection against dangers of which he knows or ought to know. But the duty on the part of the defendant owner is often confused with the invitee’s duty to protect himself, by stating in the duty rule that the owner is under a duty to protect the invitee from “hiddеn dangers” or from those that are known to the owner and unknown to the invitee. Actually, an invitee’s knowledge of danger or the existence of facts from which he ought to have knowledge is relevant on the issue of the invitee’s own contributory negligence.
There is a clearer understanding of the burden of proof and the respective duty rules imposed uрon the invitee and owner when we keep slip and fall cases within the usual pattern of negligence suits so that the invitee is burdened with proving that the owner knew or ought to have known of the presence of danger, and the owner is burdened with proving that the invitee also knew or ought to have known of the presence of danger. Smith v. Henger, supra; H. E. Butt Grocery Co. v. Johnson, Tex.Civ.App.,
To state that an invitee failed to prove a breach of the duty rule because the condition was an open and obvious one is to say that the owner is not negligent because the invitee is negligent too. The burden to prove an invitee’s contributory negligence is on the owner. Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. Shieder,
To use an “open and obvious” condition as a separate defense is misleading for the further reason that it is not every “open and obvious” condition of danger that precludes recovery. Danger is relative, and a person of ordinary care may incur some hazards. This is the holding in McAfee v. Travis Gas Corporation,
When these rules are applied to this case, the trial court’s instructed verdict is correct if the evidence (1) fails to show the presence of a danger, (2) that the owner knew and appreciated or should have known and appreciated, (3) the maintenance of which was negligence, (4) proximately causing the injuries complainеd of. If these things were shown, still the instructed verdict would be correct, if the evidence shows contributory negligence on the part of the invitee in that he knew or should have known of the danger, and that he was negligent in taking the risk, proximately causing his injuries. If the evidence is so convincing that reasonable minds can not differ, it may be described as “open and obviоus.”
Applying these principles to the burden placed on the invitee, he failed to show the presence of any danger at all, insofar as he alleged the accumulation of muddy water and the failure to place the coco mat on the approach. There was no accumulation either of water or of mud, for Camp admittеd it would drain away. Like the sidewalk and all other outside areas where the rain fell, the approach was wet from rains and from such muddy water as was tracked in from ordinary street dust on wet shoes. Appellant tracked in some dirty water by his own wet shoes. This is not a case where water and mud or other substances were permitted to accumulate and make a surface slick and slippery. No claim is made that the approach when wet was of such construction that it was more slippery than ordinary substances. The complaint is simply that it was wet because of the rain. The slippery propensity of the approach is attributed to accumulated mud and water which did not exist. There was a moderate rain on street dust tracked in by persons including the appellant. Rather than proof of a danger, this is no more than proof of a normal and natural condition during a moderate rain. There is no duty on a proprietor to stay the elements, nor to continuously mop during a shower. S. S. Kresge Co. v. Fader,
For the reasons stated, the failure to place a mat on the wet approach was not the maintenance of a condition of danger. Schmoll v. National Shirt Shops, etc.,
*419 The single remaining ground for the claimed negligence is the maintenance of the three-inch slope, which we shall consider as a proved condition of danger, though slight, since it was shown by an architect to slope more than usual to the extent of one inch over the eight foot space.
So far as this record shows, the owner had no knowledge of any danger on the approach, nor anything that suggests he ought to have had. Marshall v. San Jacinto Building Co., Inc., Tex.Civ.App.,
The many cases holding a proprietor liable to an invitee were cases wherein the evidence showed either a knowledge of danger or facts from which the proprietor should have known. In Blaugrund v. Paulk, Tex.Civ.App.,
Without proof that the owner either knew or should have known of danger, there could be no breach of duty and negligence on his part. For that reason we never reach the question whether the evidence manifested contributory negligence as a matter of law.
The judgment is affirmed.
